Hard-boiled Danish writer/director Nicolas Winding Refn was at Cannes this year with his first feature film in a decade. Easy to see how he could have burnt himself out watching this debut. In his mid-twenties at the time, he looks fresh out of the THIS IS SPINAL TAP ‘Crank it to 11' School du Cinema.* A character study on a week in the life of drug supplier Frank (Kim Bodnia) and his inconstant mates (including a feral Mads Mikkelsen),as Frank rapidly sinks into dangerous levels of debt to various drug dealers a mere step or two above him, but far deadlier. Shot entirely with jumpy hand-held camera (Morten Søborg), it has the opposite effect of Refn’s intention (a rookie gaffe), constantly calling attention to itself (especially in fast back & forth pans between actors) pulling you out of the action when it wants to pull you in. With actors playing to Refn rather than to each other . . . or to us. Guru cinéma vérité something of an oxymoron. Worse, when Frank finds his back against the wall on the seventh day, Refn starts pulling melodrama out of his hat (character & plot reversals via guns, romance, power balances, cash & friendship) that might work in a more stylized film, but here look like cheating. On the other hand . . . two sequels. It made Refn’s rep.
WATCH THIS, NOT THAT/LINK: *We much prefer Refn’s poorly received ONLY GOD FORGIVES/’13. Perhaps because rather than crank it to 11, he aims for 12. https://maksquibs.blogspot.com/2021/08/only-god-forgives-2013.html


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